If you’re trying to find out how you can watch USA vs. Italy on US TV, you’ve come to the right place.

After a disappointing performance on Thursday at Wembley, the US Men’s National Team is back in action on Tuesday when they face an Italian squad led by coach Roberto Mancini. In what should be Dave Sarachan’s last game in charge of the national team, it’ll be a huge opportunity for the youth players to impress in an important friendly.

Match: USA vs. Italy

Kickoff: Tuesday, 2:45pm ET

Looking to watch USA vs. Italy online from your work, home or on the go? If you live in the USA, there are several options to catch all the action.

We Recommend:

US Only.

Here are all of the details of where you can watch it on television and via legal streaming:

With fuboTV, you can watch USA vs. Italy and tons more friendlies with a 7-day trial. With the legal streaming service, you can watch the game on your computer, smartphone, tablet, Roku, Apple TV or hook it up to your TV with Google Chromecast.

If it wasn’t clear during the last round of friendlies, it sure became crystal clear during a 3-0 shellacking at the hands of England on Thursday: the USMNT needs to hire a full-time manager. Now. Not after the end of the international window, not after MLS Cup Final, but now. The team looked lost at Wembley. And it’s not surprising given that the last year has been more about blooding newer and younger players (which was vital) rather than focusing on creating an identity and consistent system. The lack of consistency reared its ugly head against one of the top teams in the world as the US was run out of the building. There is one final game in what has amounted to a lost year for the US as they get set to take on four time World Cup champions Italy.

Simply put, Thursday’s showing by the US was utterly appalling. Nobody did well. Christian Pulisic created the one real chance the US had but failed to finish it which saw England come right back down the field and score a sublime goal. Pulisic was then culpable on the second England goal just minutes later with a horrendous giveaway in the US half. Brad Guzan may not have been able to do much on a few of the goals, but it’s not a good look for a goalkeeper to have to pick the ball out of the back of his net three times. The US backline looked awful with John Brooks looking nothing like the standout defender from the 2016 Copa America. Jorge Villafana looked lost repeatedly, as did DeAndre Yedlin (despite playing regular in the Premier League). Wil Trapp captained the US in the midfield but again showed that he is way out of his depth at the international level (but get used to it folks because his club manager is about to become the national team manager). Bobby Wood was wholly ineffective up front. Everybody looked bad. Yes, England is a quality side that just went to the World Cup semi-finals but the US looked like they didn’t belong on the field. That’s not something the US has looked like very often over the last 20 years. The lack of a coach with a consistent vision and message is crippling this team and turning it into a laughingstock at the international level. One final games remains this year to at least try to stem the tide of that narrative against Italy.

Italy may be four-time World Cup winners, but like the US, they failed to qualify for Russia 2018. They finished 2nd in the qualifying group and then failed to score a single goal over two legs against Sweden in the playoff. It was the first time they had missed the World Cup since 1958 and it saw the sad end to the illustrious international career of Gianluigi Buffon. The named Roberto Mancini as their new manager. Mancini is one of the top managers in the world, having managed at clubs like Inter Milan, Manchester City, Galatasaray, and Zenit St. Petersburg. Results have been hard to come by for the Azzurri though. Their record this year stands at 2-3-5 (W-L-D) and they currently sit 2nd in Group 3 of the UEFA Nations League (behind Portugal and ahead of Portugal). The roster for this window (they drew 0-0 with Portugal in a Nations League game on Saturday) consists primarily of uncapped players playing in Serie A. Of the 22 players called into the camp, seven of them have 0 caps and another eight of them have fewer than 10 caps. Players of note that are in the squad include defender Leonardo Bonucci of Juventus (6 goals in 84 caps) and mid-fielder Marco Verratti of Paris Saint-Germain (1 goal in 28 caps). Of the seven strikers in the squad, nobody has more than 10 caps and none of them have scored an international goal.

Notes:

1. Weston McKennie and Luca de la Torre departed US camp on Sunday morning, leaving the roster for the Italy game with 24 players.

2. Only four US players have ever scored against Italy: Aldo Donelli in 1930, John Harkes in 1992, Landon Donovan in 2009 and Clint Dempsey in 2012 (Italian defender Zaccardo also scored and own goal against the US in 2006).

3. Since winning the Gold Cup Final in July of 2017, the US has won just four of its last fifteen games, posting a record of 4-6-5 for a 43% win percentage.

Gelsenkirchen (Germany) (AFP) – Virgil van Dijk hailed the Netherlands’ belief as his 91st-minute equaliser fired them into the semi-finals of the Nations League after their dramatic 2-2 draw with Germany.

The point in Gelsenkirchen was enough for the Dutch to advance to the last four at the expense of world champions France after scoring twice in the final six minutes in a dramatic finish.

Liverpool defender Van Dijk volleyed home a cross in added time to complete the Dutch fight back after Quincy Promes had scored their first goal on 85 minutes.

Germany, who led 2-0 after only 20 minutes through goals by Timo Werner and Leroy Sane, were punished for not being clinical enough in the second half.

Van Dijk said it was “a fantastic feeling” to finish top of Group One ahead of European powerhouses France and the Germans.

“We should all be proud of ourselves. I know I am,” he said after the Dutch join England, Switzerland and Portugal in the Nations League’s last four.

“We worked so hard every game and to get rewards for that is fantastic.”

After missing out on qualifying for the finals of both Euro 2016 and this year’s World Cup, Van Dijk said the priority is to get the Dutch to the Euro 2020 finals.

“If we can win the Nations League, fantastic, but we all want to make sure we’re at the European Championships and do very well there to make our country proud,” he added.

Netherlands head coach Ronald Koeman praised his team for turning two of their three late chances into goals.

“It was very difficult for us, the Germans were sharper and faster in the first half,” admitted Koeman.

“We fought to come back in the second half and pressed.

“They had their chances to finish it off, but the fight and belief we showed was enough for the point.

“We didn’t play great football, it wasn’t our best performance, but it was enough.

“No one expected Holland to win the group.

“Of course, we did not want to go down to League ‘B’, but winning the group was a dream.”

– Germans rue wasted chances –

After Germany missed several second-half chances, head coach Joachim Loew rued the victory that got away from his inexperienced side.

“That’s the price you pay for having a young side, we have to learn to close a game down,” said Loew, who started only three 2014 World Cup winners in Mats Hummels, Toni Kroos and Manuel Neuer.

Viewing numbers for the first el Clásico of the 2018/19 season between Barcelona and Real Madrid have been boosted by digital numbers.

As soccer fans continue to watch games on devices instead of television more than ever before, the viewing numbers for smartphones, tablets and over-the-top (OTT) devices are becoming more important than ever before.

Viewership of El Clásico drove the highest daily levels for both streams and unique users on beIN SPORTS Connect during the month of October. The previous highest spike of the month was on October 20 between Barcelona vs. Sevilla.

Gelsenkirchen (Germany) (AFP) – Virgil van Dijk equalised in the 91st-minute to send the Netherlands into the Nations League semi-finals, at the expense of France, after sealing a dramatic 2-2 draw away to Germany on Monday.

The Dutch advance at the expense of world champions France after scoring twice in the final six minutes in Gelsenkirchen as Germany were punished for but not being clinical enough in the second half.

Liverpool defender Van Dijk fired home to complete the Dutch fight back after Quincy Promes scored their first goal on 85 minutes to cancel out Timo Werner and Leroy Sane’s first-half goals for Germany.

The point in Gelsenkirchen was enough to send the Dutch into the Nations League semis as Group One winners, with world champions France second, while bottom side Germany were already relegated to the ‘B’ league.

Ronaldo Koeman’s side showed plenty of heart against the Germans, who had been 2-0 up after just 20 minutes.

Thomas Mueller, a second-half replacement, reached the milestone of 100 Germany appearances, but Van Dijk dampened any celebrations for the hosts.

Having described 2018 as a ‘slap in the face’ – after a record six defeats in a calender year – Germany showed the ‘killer instinct’ head coach Joachim Loew had called for after their World Cup debacle – but only in the first half.

The trio of Serge Gnabry, Sane and Werner, so effective in Thursday’s 3-0 friendly win over Russia, caused the Dutch defence no end of problems in the opening 45 minutes.

Having started the rebuilding process in the wake of Germany’s woeful World Cup display, crashing out after the group stages, Loew started with only three Brazil 2014 winners in Manuel Neuer, Mats Hummels and Toni Kroos.

Dutch coach Ronald Koeman made two changes from Friday’s 2-0 win over France with Kenny Tete taking over from Denzel Dumfries at right back and Promes on the right wing for Steven Bergwijn.

Germany needed just nine minutes to land the first blow in the clash of the European heavyweights.

There was little on when Gnabry’s pass found Werner on the edge of the area, but the 22-year-old showed ice-cold finishing by hitting the bottom corner of the net past Jasper Cillessen.

Werner ended his barren run of eight internationals without a goal and Sane added the second, with the help of a deflection, 11 minutes later to floor the Dutch.

Geneva (AFP) – A former head of FIFA’s Ethics Committee has stepped down from his position on Switzerland’s prosecution supervisory authority in order to not hamper ongoing investigations into football, it was announced Monday.

Cornel Borbely presided on the investigation chamber of world football governing body’s ethics committee from May 2015 until his dismissal alongside adjudicatory chamber head Hans-Joachim Eckert in May 2017, following the arrival of Gianni Infantino as FIFA president.

In a brief statement, Switzeland’s public prosecutors office (MPC) said that “current developments in complex investigations into football … have resulted in this area becoming of unexpected importance in the activities of the AS-MPC (MPC’s supervisory authority)”.

The supervisory authority has six members, who are responsible for ensuring the smooth running of investigations conducted by the MPC.

“In order to enable the AS-MPC to count on all of its resources, Cornel Borbély has decided to step down,” added the MPC.

Since a raid on a luxury hotel in Zurich in May 2015 led to the arrests of a number of FIFA executives and shone the spotlight on the corrupt underbelly of world football, Switzerland has pursued a number of cases.

Charges have been pressed against former FIFA president Sepp Blatter as well as against FIFA’s former Secretary General Jerome Valcke.

Swiss investigators have also searched UEFA’s offices in Nyon concerning revelations made in the so-called Panama Papers over a broadcasting rights contract signed by the organisation’s former secretary general, Gianni Infantino, the current president of FIFA.

The latest series of Football Leaks allegations meanwhile shone a light on Infantino’s relationship with another Swiss prosecutor, Rinaldo Arnold, spurring Swiss authorities to open an investigation.

Infantino allegedly invited Arnold to attend the World Cup in Russia, the 2016 FIFA Congress in Mexico and the Champions League final in Milan that year, in exchange for organising meetings with Swiss Attorney General Michael Lauber and other attorney general’s office chiefs.

Paris (AFP) – Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on Monday that he had pitched the idea of a joint bid between his country, Portugal and Morocco to host the 2030 World Cup.

“I made the proposal, firstly to the government then to King Mohammed VI to launch a shared application with Morocco, Portugal and Spain to host the 2030 World Cup,” Sanchez said in Rabat after a meeting with the monarch.

“It will be the first two-continent application, with Europe and Africa, and King Mohammed VI welcomed the proposal warmly.”

Earlier this year the King ordered the Royal Moroccan Football Federation to launch their own World Cup bid but the office of the Moroccan prime minister, Saad Eddine el Othmani, refused to comment on Sanchez’s statement when contacted by AFP.

The north African country has failed five times to bring the tournament to the southern shores of the Mediterranean, with the United States, Canada and Mexico most recently beating them to the 2026 competition.

Uruguay, Argentina and Paraguay have proposed a bid to coordinate the 2030 event, which will mark 100 years since the first tournament.

Greece, Bulgaria, Romania and Serbia are also considering a joint bid, as are the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland.

Dembele was dropped by the Spanish champions for last week’s shock 4-3 home defeat to Real Betis following what coach Ernesto Valverde called a “sporting assessment”.

But sports daily As reports that the Catalans are worried not only that he might be addicted to gaming, but also that it might ruin his career at the club.

And Suarez, no stranger to disciplinary issues himself, says that the 21-year-old France international, signed for an initial fee of 105 million euros, needs to follow the more virtuous example set by some of his Barca colleagues.

“Ousmane knows that football is a privilege for every player, maybe he should concentrate more and be more responsible regarding certain things,” the Uruguay striker told reporters ahead of his country’s clash with France at the Stade de France on Tuesday.

“There are examples of professionalism at Barca that he can draw inspiration from. He’ll continue to learn, with that self-confidence that will enable him to succeed at Barcelona.”

Suarez has attracted controversy throughout his career. He was banned for biting players during his time at Ajax — where he was nicknamed “Cannibal” by the Dutch press — and Chelsea.

But he most famously took a chunk out of Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini during Uruguay’s final group game in the 2014 World Cup, throwing himself to the ground as Chiellini showed bite marks and Italy’s players protested to the referee.

Amid the chaos Uruguay won a corner and scored the winning goal that took them through and knocked 10-man Italy out.

Suarez was handed a record nine-game World Cup ban and barred from any football-related activity for four months by FIFA, meaning that he was unable to make his debut for Barca until late October that year.

In 2011 he was banned for eight matches by the Football Association for racially abusing Patrice Evra during a clash between Liverpool and Manchester United.

London (AFP) – Former England footballer Paul Gascoigne has been charged with sexually assaulting a woman on board a train, British Transport Police said on Monday.

The ex-Tottenham and Lazio player was charged with “one count of sexual assault by touching”, said a spokeswoman for the force.

The 51-year-old, who has struggled with alcoholism since he retired from top-flight football, was arrested at Durham station in northeast England on August 20.

He is due to appear in a magistrates’ court on December 11.

Gascoigne — known as “Gazza” — made his name with Newcastle before going on to play for Tottenham, Italian giants Lazio and several other teams including Glasgow Rangers.

The midfielder, widely regarded as one of the most talented players of his generation, was also a key member of the England side that reached the semi-finals of the 1990 World Cup in Italy. He won 57 caps in total.

Gascoigne was one of the first big-name footballers to arrive in China when he made the shock decision to be a player-coach of second division Gansu Tianma in 2003 but he lasted just a handful of games.

In 2016, he was fined and ordered to pay compensation by a court after making a racist comment to a black security guard at his “An Evening with Gazza” show.

In an interview published on Tottenham’s website last year he said: “Sometimes when I look back and people say to me ‘do you regret anything in your career?’

“Perhaps I left Spurs too early. I loved it there. The players, the staff, everyone was class and the team spirit was phenomenal, absolute class. We had a great team.

“People talk about me being a bit of a joker, messing about, but we had about 15 in that squad.”

Last month Gascoigne’s nomination for a place in the Scottish Football Hall of Fame was withdrawn, with officials expressing concerns over his state of his health.

Sydney (AFP) – Australia’s football governing body elected a new chairman and several board members Monday as it drew a line under its long-running reform battle with FIFA.

The end of Steven Lowy’s chairmanship comes after football’s world governing body successfully pushed Football Federation Australia into democratic reforms, and marks the end of his family’s more than decade-long grip on the body.

Chris Nikou, a lawyer, was elected by the board to replace the outgoing Lowy, who chose not to stand again amid the reform push which had seen FIFA threaten to take over the federation.

Following a period of turbulence over the reforms in recent months, the FFA adopted an expanded new congress in October to include A-League clubs, the footballers’ association and a women’s council.

The move was opposed by Lowy, the son of Westfield shopping-mall tycoon and former long-time FFA boss Frank Lowy, who said the move could hand the A-League’s foreign owners too much power.

He finally threw in the towel in August, paving the way for new leadership.

Nikou, a former chairman of Football Federation of Victoria, was re-elected onto the board alongside three others including women’s football pioneer Heather Reid, who was chosen as vice-chair.

The board election signalled the end of an era for the FFA. It is the first time in more than a decade that no-one from the powerful Lowy family is at its helm.

Sydney (AFP) – Tim Cahill’s farewell appearance for Australia will be limited to the last five minutes as the Socceroos look ahead to life without their record scorer — and wonder how to replace his goals.

Cahill, 38, will earn his 108th and final cap in Tuesday’s friendly against Lebanon in Sydney, but coach Graham Arnold has thornier matters at hand ahead of Australia’s Asian Cup defence in January in the United Arab Emirates.

Arnold said on Monday that Cahill, the former Everton forward, would be restricted to a five-minute cameo as the Socceroos aim to make the most of valuable match practice.

“The first 85 minutes is all about our performance,” Arnold told Fox Sports, ahead of Australia’s final outing before regrouping in late December for their Asian Cup preparations.

“There (are) no friendly games — the last five minutes can be for Timmy.”

The move echoes last week’s somewhat controversial goodbye for England’s record scorer Wayne Rooney, who came out of international retirement to make his final appearance as a substitute against USA.

While England have come on leaps and bounds without Rooney, reaching this year’s World Cup semi-finals, Australia haven’t found Cahill so easy to replace.

The talismanic Cahill, known for his prodigious leap and knack of scoring important goals, has hit the net 50 times for his country, playing in four World Cups.

New-look Australia’s lack of goals was apparent in Saturday’s 1-1 stalemate against South Korea, when the hosts dominated but had to wait until stoppage time for Massimo Luongo’s equaliser.

Arnold, who took charge after this year’s disappointing World Cup campaign, said the problem was so acute that he had ordered his forwards to do extra “finishing practice” at their clubs.

“We will set the players’ programmes after this game, especially the strikers, that when they go back to club-land where we can’t control what they do at their clubs, that they work on a lot of finishing practice,” Arnold said.

“Goal-scoring becomes a habit. It is about not only putting the ball in the back of the net, but it’s also about having the confidence and the belief to score goals. It’s also something that becomes natural for a player.”

Among the starters is set to be South Sudanese refugee Awer Mabil, who plies his trade with Denmark’s Midtjylland.

The winger shone for the Socceroos off the bench against Korea, and Arnold hinted strongly the 23-year-old could be in the starting line-up.

Milan (AFP) – Roberto Mancini will try out an experimental side in Tuesday’s friendly against the United States in Genk as the Italian coach searches for a solution to Italy’s goalscoring problem after missing out on the Nations League knockout stages.

Saturday’s goalless draw with Portugal at the San Siro was enough for the European champions advance to the semi-finals at Italy’s expense, and Mancini’s focus has turned towards Euro 2020 ahead of the qualifying draw in Dublin on December 2.

The ex-Manchester City boss said Sunday he wants to “see young players in action” against the United States.

Veteran Giorgio Chiellini has returned to club side Juventus and Lorenzo Insigne, Alessandro Florenzi, Jorginho, and Ciro Immobile were also released back to rejoin their respective clubs following and end to their Nations League campaign that was simultaneously frustrating and encouraging.

“Of course, there’s a long way to go and we are working, trying to renew the national team with young players and a different tactical approach,” Mancini told Italian television network Rai.

Nearly nine million people watched the game as the country embraces a younger, more vibrant Azzurri after last year’s World Cup qualification disaster.

“Scoring goals is an important detail, but we played very well,” added Mancini, whose side only scored two goals in their Group A3 campaign.

Since the former Manchester City and Inter Milan boss took over they have scored just seven in eight games but Nations League performances against Poland and Portugal have given hope for the future.

“We’ll slowly sort out the attack … we are a little unlucky in some situations, but the team is proving that it can compete at any level in the future and we can only get stronger from here.”

– ‘Bright future’ –

One of Mancini’s problems is that his top scorer is veteran defender Chiellini, who has scored eight goals in his 100 appearances for the national team.

The four-time world champions failed to qualify for the 2018 World Cup after being held to a goalless draw in the San Siro against Sweden last November.

And they missed chances to score against Portugal on Saturday.

“Now we still need to resolve that problem of scoring goals,” continued Mancini.

“I don’t think there’s too much that needs doing, as in some situations it’s purely about shooting 5cm one way or 10cm higher up.”

Ninteen-year-old Juventus striker Moise Kean could play a role in Tuesday’s game, along with Brescia midfielder Sandro Tonali, 18, Roma’s Nicolo Zaniolo, 19, and Atalanta’s 22-year-old defender Gianluca Mancini, who has scored in each of his last three league games.

London (AFP) – Gareth Southgate has challenged his vibrant young England side to build on a year to remember after they clinched a place in the Nations League semi-finals in dramatic style.

Just over a year ago, England’s qualification for the World Cup was greeted with yawns and a barrage of paper aeroplanes from fans disillusioned by decades of underachievement.

But Southgate’s team won back their place in the nation’s hearts over the course of a remarkable 2018 that saw them reach the World Cup semi-finals for the first time since 1990.

Although that World Cup run ended with an agonising extra-time loss to Croatia, Southgate and his players have refused to be defined by failure in the way that their more vaunted predecessors in the Three Lions shirt often were.

So when Andrej Kramaric gave Croatia the lead against the run of play in the second half of Sunday’s winner-takes-all shoot-out at Wembley, it was a coming of age moment for England’s prodigies.

They rose to the challenge in impressive style as Jesse Lingard came off the bench to equalise with 15 minutes left before captain Harry Kane poked in the 85th-minute winner.

Kane and his team-mates celebrated joyously as Wembley roared in delight and an jubilant Southgate punched the air on the touchline.

The harmonious scene was a fitting finale to England’s year of redemption and a far cry from the 1-0 win over Slovenia in October 2017 that ensured they would qualify for the World Cup.

That uninspiring display came while Southgate’s revolution was still taking shape, played out to a soundtrack of bored fans cheering when the paper aeroplanes they were launching from the stands made it to the pitch.

Slammed as “lifeless, uninspired and mediocre” by one match report after the Slovenia game, England went to the World Cup with expectations at an all-time low.

But Southgate was gradually winning the hearts and minds of his players with his astute man-management and progressive game-plans.

– Humble approach –

The modest England manager credits his squad for keeping a humble approach amid all the recent plaudits, all the while keeping their focus on the next opponent.

“You can only have that consistency if you work on things every day and have the humility to go back to work,” he said.

“The World Cup was far bigger (than the Nations League) but you have to look at the next challenge. This was a great opportunity to test ourselves against top teams.”

If you’re trying to find out how you can watch Germany vs. Netherlands in the US, we have all of the details for you about the UEFA Nations League match.

Monday’s game is a huge match for the Netherlands against their arch-rivals Germany. The Dutch will reach the Finals with a draw in Germany due to their head-to-head advantage over France. Meanwhile, the French will reach the Finals if the Netherlands lose in Germany.

The match will be shown live on US television and streaming.

League: UEFA Nations League

Genre: Sports

Looking to watch UEFA Nations League matches online from your office, home or on the go? If you live in the USA, there are several options to catch all the action.

We Recommend:

US Only.

Here are all of the details of where you can watch it on television and via legal streaming:

With ESPN+, you can watch Germany vs. Netherlands and tons more UEFA Nations League games with a 7-day trial. With the legal streaming service, you can watch the game on your computer, smartphone, tablet, Amazon Fire TV, Roku, Chromecast, PlayStation 4 and XBOX One.

In addition to all of the soccer coverage, ESPN+ also includes a selection of live games from MLB, MLS, NHL, select PGA TOUR golf, Top Rank Boxing and Grand Slam tennis from Wimbledon to the US Open and Australian Open. Plus you get instant access to your favorite college sports like football, basketball, lacrosse, softball and more.